The Heirs of Death

By Tima_R

66.7K 6K 3.3K

Book 2 #19 in Fantasy #8 in action-packed #27 in dark magic #28 in fantasy-adventure Everything Celestia Arme... More

Starless: A Prologue
Part One
1. Behind the Gate
2. The Black Fire
3.1 The Council
3.2 The Council
4.1 The Ball
4.2 The Ball
5.1 Taloan
5.2 Taloan
6.1 Hidden Words
6.2 Hidden Words
7. The preparations
8. The Gathering
9. Light in Darkness
10. Breaking Ice
11.1 Strike of Faith
11.2 Strike of Faith
12. Choices
13. Shot at Salvation
14.1 The Fawn Market
14.2 The Fawn Market
15. Oath of Life
16.1 Elayda
16.2 Elayda
17.1 Singed Heart
17.2 Singed Heart
18. Reflections
19. A Hiss of Darkness
20. A Game of Threads
21. 1. Child of Deceit
21. 2. Child of Deceit
22. The Fang of Laros
23. 1. The First King
23.2 The First King
24. Fihéra
Part Two
25. Eziara
26. 1. Hall of Death
26.2 Hall of Death
27. Masks
28.1 Fissures
28.2 Fissures
29. Ashes
30. Rimelia
31. Stallions
33. Gods-Reached
34. Mountain's Heart
35.Nightweaver
36. Wildfire
37. Spy
38.1 Lullaby of Death
38. 2 Lullaby of Death
39. Black Mirror
40. Hollow
41.1 Alliance
41.2 Alliance
42. The Cradle
43. A Game of Cards
44.1 Warsong
44.2 Warsong
45. The Stone Tower
46. Chained
47. Falling Reign
About BOOK 3
Book 3 REVEAL

32. Warrior Queen

791 81 49
By Tima_R

WARRIOR QUEEN

The body in black had been unconscious for far before he fell, facedown in snow—the cracking sound that echoed around us as Luthian, unblinking, stepped on a sprawled hand was enough of a cue. There had been no reaction.
 
The other two, they were as aware as we were, snarling as a band of ice-kissed magic wrapped around their wrists and ankles. I spared them a glance, eyes skimming over the thin frames, the disheveled hair, the familiar faces.
 
I picked the fallen knife. It throbbed warm in my hands, pulsing with a forgotten power that stretched through the obsidian-like blade in veins of glowing blues. Like blood in flesh, it throbbed and it palpitated, hissing an old chant in my being. I couldn't fight the edge of the grin claiming my lips. I gripped the pommel hard, fingers running over the roughly made weapon, and threw it to the captives. It landed next to the eldest, a boy a couple months shy from sixteen, a breath away from slitting his jaws. 
 
The girl's quivering breath was all that echoed around us for a long heartbeat. Yet Luthian paid her no heed, striding his way toward us with a steadiness—despite the cold—that could shake lands. Not even a labored breath. Utterly unaffected by the absence of a cloak over his shoulders. He caught my eyes, and smirked. 
 
I'd never seen Luthian smirking. Perhaps he, too, found a hidden piece of himself in Veidor.
 
The heavy sac fell silent on the snow, a faint jiggling of steel coming out mute as clothes muffled the impact, cloaks' hems spilling out of the bag. Veidor rummaged through the massive amount of fabrics and weapons and then handed me a wide, flask-like bottle. It was deliciously warm. And the smell that came out of it—food, it was food.
 
My glances traveled from the bottle to the bag to the newly appointed Second Leader of my forces. "How many houses did you sneak into?"
 
His eyes were wicked and gleaming as he pulled out a dagger sharpened so heavily it could slit throats as easily as a sword. "None actually." I raised my eyebrows, offering Carter some of the soup before drinking it. His reply was a mere shaking of the head. I sniffed, then took a gulp.
 
"That", Luthian pointed at the flask, "I did fill it from a still cooking pot.''
 
"That explains the taste." I had better meals, and worse ones. But it was its hotness down my throat that made me take more and more of it.
 
"The rest, it was the treasure of raiding the Umbra Warriors' main barrack."
 
I almost chocked on the watery food, and Dier's body went taught. Luthian didn't wait before adding, "I tracked a troop rounding through the village's border, which is unlikely for them to come so discreetly. Apparently, they were heading for a gathering under the demand of Rimelia's most important Legion Leaders.''
 
My eyes flickered to the unconscious body, to the pale skin peeking out beneath a black, scaly artwork of armor. Veidor caught the attention. "Brigadier General, responsible in Rimelia.'' His eyes met mine. ''Your prey, since I considered a kill might liberate your magic for a while.''
 
Indeed, my powers were hissing once again, those few moments of liberty were as good now as nothing. Let us out, they seemed to hiss in my blood. Let us be free. I forced them down again.
 
Luthian spared his captives a moment's glance before turning to Carter, eyes a red a shade brighter than my Second and brother. ''I've called the rest and turned the place into a slaughterhouse, but they are many—the greatest meeting in years. I'm sure you'll still find some throats to slit.'' Carter remained silent, any trace of lightness on his face gone, as though shattered by hat knife. A lord's face—it was a lord's face looking down at Luthian, a face I'd so rarely seen. ''And your newly acquired powers are more than needed to confound a lie.''
 
He still remained silent, eyes and minds analyzing everything, powers picking the auras of the steel and the fabrics in the sac. And Luthian, he remained unfazed, unblinking. Never one to bend, even in the face of a lord. Had been so since we first met. But now, it was something else, another type of defiance, a silent and wicked swaggering. "And why is it," finally demanded Carter, a mist of dark shadows slowly coming to life around his fingers, "that you left so early in your hunt, brother?"
 
Brother—him, too, in disguise younger than Carter. The flicker of his eyes to my face hinted enough of what had been creeping in his demeanor.
 
The smile that Luthian gave was feral. "I got my aim. I have no burning vengeance left when it comes to the others."
 
The shadows intensified around Dier, stretching around his shoulders, his legs, slowly swallowing him whole. ''Unfortunate it is, not prizing the head."
 
''It truly is.''
 
The face Carter wore like skin ever so lightly melted, eyes simmering, powers aching to be freed, just like mine. The shadows were at Carter's neck, shrouding him as his words slipped in my mind, 'I have told no one of the prophecy, or the mating bond, for it is a decision that is yours to take, either to tell them, or leave them in oblivion.'
 
I didn't have the time to respond before the darkness stretched and thinned, spreading with the winds. Dier was gone.
 
I took another gulp of the soup, gingerly shifting my numb limbs against the cloak Carter had left above mine. I hadn't realized how heavily torpid my legs had become. I grunted.
 
Luthian had been at my side before I could register it, one arm sliding beneath my shoulders to support me should I ever wish to get up. I barely raised an eyebrow as I lightly nudged him. It was enough to make him lift me up, both arms securing me. I couldn't feel my legs, not even the cold biting my feet. Only the piercing, tingling sensation as blood slowly flowed back. ''Did he literally kick you away for you to sport that unnerving stare?"
 
His smile said far more than enough, but he didn't comment as we leisurely started walking, each step of mine painful and unbalanced. Yet he didn't complain, or run out of patience, as he still supported me as we made our way to the captives.
 
The snarl that came out of the boy's throat was the only sound spreading around us, his eyes on the shining sphere I had summoned and monitoring every movement, every bruise and bandage and blood smears peeking as the wind billowed through my cloaks. Chained hands tried to reach for the knife, body diving forward to shield the sister, who seemed barely a year younger than him. Their faces so familiar, so similar to one I'd seen many times before, were pale and bruised.
 
And when we arrived to the three of them, standing a couple steps in front of the siblings, the brother's warning stares did not falter, did not break, until Veidor spoke, "You still bend your knee too heavily while lunging.'' Luthian removed one arm, the other remaining on my shoulder as his eyes caught the faint glimmer of recognition flaring on the boy's face. It went as fast as it came. "But you're aim has improved, even if still too reckless sometimes.''
 
A gentle stir of winds had the knife carried away from the sister's reaching hands to his, the throbbing of its strength an indicator of the demon blood coursing in his veins. He twirled it over, noting every etched symbol, every swirling pattern running down the blade as I whispered to his mind what each detail signified.
 
The wind carried the knife again, keeping it in place, as Veidor slit his arm with the dagger he'd picked. His blood fell in floating drops of viscous black. The siblings were unmoving, and I eyed the eldest one as he stared and stared at Luthian, fighting the memories rising and contradicting with what was happening. With the blood's color.
 
It was I who steered the drops of blood toward the blade, black sliding along the obsidian blade. And splattering red. The girl swallowed on her muffled cry. A cry of mercy, perhaps.
 
Because I knew what this knife was, the pulsating magic in it—it was the same one I had spent long nights with Ramos studying and creating before I awoke father. A weapon meant to shatter all demonic existence, a blade capable of killing demons in heartbeats finally put to experience. And it worked fantastically, capable of thoroughly destroying the Arowcinders' spell.
 
Not demons, despite the faces and the powers and the blood.
 
Luthian was grinning as the boy looked up to our faces, as he breathed, "Lieutenant."
 
For a heartbeat, I slid into the boy's mind—Harald—and allowed him to see past the veil the Lady in White had woven, allowed him to stare at the icy, blue eyes and the white, shining hair. The chains around their wrists and ankles melted, and the boy had been at Luthian's side in a heartbeat, a hand falling on his shoulder.
 
"You've grown in such little months.''
 
A former lieutenant and his trooper, almost a decade between them—this image, it was so different. The image of Sorena, the sister, running to embrace him, it made me realize just how little we'd seen of him, of what he'd allowed us to see.
 
Sorena's eyes drifted to me, to my injuries, to the bloodied face. "How are you still even alive?"
 
I barely arched an eyebrow. "Powers can do many great things, youngling.''
 
The words lingered for a long minute, thoughts running wild and untamed in their minds, dark eyes taking in every detail. Dark eyes, mirrors to Nayal's. And the same tawny skin, the thick, coffee-dark hair. My handmaid's brother was still studying me with his stares as he whispered, "Who are you?"
 
I did not reply, even when I saw the curiosity and the first lick of fear slowly caressing their thoughts. Fear of who could wield so much strength, of who rested behind that mask. There weren't many answers for that question.
I only smiled, a slow building of magic wrapping around their ankles. "None should know of this encounter for now.'' The magic started taking shape, its emptiness swaying around their limbs.
 
Harald repeated his words, my magic at his and his sister's chests. "Tell Nayal I know who sent the dress.'' My powers were at their necks. "And she'll tell you who I am.''  
 
The magic devoured them whole. And they were gone, the knife with them.
 
I forced my feet to move, the numbness gone, but not the aftermath of the trial. The hand I raised was enough to halt Luthian from helping me, but he remained ready, in case I fell face first in snow. "You trained them, didn't you?''
 
"I did, a few months before being named Lieutenant at the Lady's service last autumn."
 
"You didn't tell them you aren't a lieutenant anymore.''
 
A heartbeat of silence passed as I made my way to the Brigadier General, a breath of magic destroying the blood still hovering in the air. I lowered myself to the ground, carefully placing my weight on my knees as one hand grabbed the Umbra Warrior by the neck, powers sneaking in his mind.
 
Luthian came along, crouching next to me. His eyes met mine. "I haven't yet felt like I truly own the position you gave me, that’s why I didn't tell them.''
 
I pushed at it no more, even when I knew and sensed all that dwelled behind those words. Instead, I asked as I pulled my hand away, "What has the Legion Leader of the north done for you to slaughter him that painfully?"
 
He didn't look surprised at what I knew, what I saw in the General's mind, as though well at ease knowing I could feel and sense and see and hear all that laid in my powers' radius. He knew I could pull the answer from his mind, but he answered nonetheless, "He was the one who burned my village, the one who had mother tied and burned down with every other woman who couldn't escape.''
 
Another wave of silence befell on us.
 
"Why opening the gate here?"

He lifted his head, chin angled to the direction he came from. "After I fled with my father, we hid in the village we've been stealing from. And when I was still a trooper in training, I was sent here for an undercover mission. It was the first place that came to mind.''
 
I forced the unconscious body on its back, the sickly pale face covered in snow as I made to look at it. My fists met their aim with a ferocity that had been building up since the moment I woke up in the dungeon. Again and again and again, despite the pain, despite how weary muscles felt. Again and again until blood and teeth tainted the snow-covered earth. Until jaws and nose were broken to splinters. Until my own hands ached and bled.
 
I stopped, falling back on my rear to take a breath. White smoke curled out of my lips, the sphere still gleaming, thin and pale light running over the armor, the lifeless skin. The blood.
 
"He is still alive,'' was all that Veidor said as he made to reach him by the hair. Scrapping of steel against snow echoed as the former lieutenant dragged the body until it rested between us, visage facing the starless night, arms and legs spread.
 
''I know.'' This time, claws slid beneath the open spots of his armor, digging in and out. ''It is too pitiful to kill him unconscious.''

Red eyes were fixed on my face, studying every feature, every stare blank as my claws came in and out, covered with blood to my knuckles.
 
''I never thought I would hear those words from you.''
 
I spared him a lingering stare. "I've changed from the girl you knew.'' My claws went to his knees, scratching bones as magic removed the layers of his armor.
 
''I know that.'' He pushed an intricate knee cap fashioned after a serpent's scales away, his gazes unwavering. ''I realized it the moment I saw you atop the staircase with the King, looking everything like a warrior in a queen's dress.''
 
''You wouldn't imagine how nervous I was back then.''
 
''I think otherwise.'' The hands tearing muscles to ribbons stopped, and my only response had been an arched eyebrow. He smiled, slightly. "The first time I stood in front of a large crowd,'' he tapped his claws against another  piece f steel, ''I forgot how many calming brews I took that night.'' He leaned forward, attention falling on the feebly twitching fingers, the eyelids fluttering.
 
I wiped my claws with my shirt, a leash of magic forming around the Umbra Warrior's neck, just waiting for him to come to full consciousness.
 
Considering all the damage I'd done, it could take a few minutes. A few minutes that passed tense as Luthian's thoughts were brewing, as memories were surging up and down like an ocean under a stormy sky. So dark, so bitter I could almost taste them, could almost hear the howling winds and piercing cries in my ears. They would not bow down.
 
"They burned them all,'' he finally said, his eyes coming back to meet mine, answering a question I didn't deign to ask. "Mothers and fathers and children. Anyone they could lay a hand on. All women old enough to be mothers were tied to a pyre, some with their children, some alone. Fathers were taken down by swords and arrows. Young boys were taken to training, and the girls near their first bleed were taken for breeding.''
 
I wanted to say something, but found no words. None at all. Those horrors he spoke about—I could imagine the mighty flames spreading through the village, melting snows and skins. Could hear the trashing women, the grunting, falling men. Could sense the horror on my tongue.

"She was carrying when it happened.''
 
The magic around the general's neck went taut as I lost grip when his words settled. She—his mother. Oh Gods oh Gods oh
 
''We couldn't save her. They burned, both of them. And only a bunch of us were capable of fleeing, some young boys and two fathers guiding us, mine one of them.''
 
The magic wrapped harder and the general's eyes shot open, chest heaving and hands reaching for an invisible chain around his neck.  Choking  sounds were carried by the winds. Luthian stood, taking a step back, leaving me space to move as the general's head snapped from left to right again and again. Bones cracked so badly the sound echoed around us.
 
Magic lifted him up, powers slipping in his mind, in his nerves, in his very muscles, slowly burning from the inside. Mind to mind, such a different sort of intimacy in killing. No warm breaths and sticking blood, but an utter bareness, a new sort of pain.
 
Mental claws and talons shredded through his mind. The Brigadier screamed, uselessly trying to free his hands from his sides. His head rolled, his mouth and nose bled, his tongue became numb. And his limbs were still trying to fight the control I had over them.
 
Skin started to decay around his temples, flaking away in gusts of dust. Teeth melted in his mouth, eyes were on the verge of falling out. And I was still wrecking his mind. The greatest myth to be believed, both amongst demons and Ardorians, was that spirit elemental could not be used in fights and wars.
 
Spirit—the strongest elemental to exist in mortal blood. The power to control minds and times and dimensions. The power to bring down armies with a thought, to wreck words. The power no one would see coming, the weapon the demons hadn't known of yet.
 
I could have ended him with half a thought, a passing whim and he would have been long gone. But he was in pain, he was locked within his own self, paying for all the lives he ruined. For all those he killed. Fingers turned to dust, metal melting and raining, and more blood seeped out, boiling into a heavy smoke.
 
I'd never killed someone so horribly yet. And I found not a lick of mercy within me, nothing but a craving and a need to make him feel what so many had endured. Perhaps I truly was a monster, perhaps we were all—only from a different blood and breed.
 
My powers rravaged, running free with a delight, snapping his neck until it almost hung loose, until death was looming around us. I still held his soul here, his consciousness and his existence in my hand. Too early to end him still. Too early—
 
''We were expecting a girl.''
 
I found myself turning to Luthian with an urgency I couldn't explain. And then my leash on my powers was gone—gone as I beheld his face, the shadows in his eyes. The memories flaring back. The memories of the ball, and the moments on the edge of the Beheaded, the time we were both lost in Rimelia's mountains. The temple's stairs, his parents.
 
Their smiles. Finally at ease.
 
More magic exploded. Winds hurled. Earths trembled. I wasn't sure if the sky was truly shaking as I stared at him. At the past coming to me on sprinting limbs. Brigadier General of Rimelia, the man who had given the man Luthian had killed the green light to burn his home. Both of them responsible of those deaths, one of them in my hands.
 
More powers came to life, utterly invisible to the world outside these barren lands. More and more and more.
 
And then it all dwindled down in an instant. And the body floating in the air was no more, not even a whisper of ashes.
 
Veidor was still staring at where the general was, face unblinking at the display of powers. But—''You didn't kill him, did you? ''
 
I didn't.
 
''He is wiped out of existence, only a shred of him remains to be tortured by the Gods.''
 
His face had gone pale and ashen and hard all at once. Completely clueless to what he was supposed to make out of it.
 
''This,'' I said running low on breaths, ''is the real face of the warrior queen you spoke about.''
 
I didn't feel my legs, or my hands, as I lost all strength to stand. But despite the shock, he'd been there to catch me. I expected him to back away, to run while he still could. But he slid in my ear as his arms braced me, "And this face is so goddamn beautiful.'' His arms tightened around me, and I became aware of the pain still there after the excitement—that came with releasing so many powers—vanished.
 
"Are you still hell-bent on paying that debt?"
 
"Until my very last breath.''
 
I put distance between us, enough for me to stare at him. ''Then consider me the sister you didn't get to have. And I shall consider this debt paid.''
 
He almost shook his head. ''It is an oath I have already given.''
 
To my father—him who had seen past both of us in a heartbeat. To the king, who would have not named him my brother in this quest otherwise. An oath to Luthian's very own delight. I should have known it since the moment I saw him leave, galloping away on that sea.
 
''This is my price, Luthian Vardèz, are you ready to pay it?"
 
A heartbeat of silence.
 
''Until the very last moment.''

 Hope you enjoyed this chapter, and if you did please consider clicking the little, shiny star. It would mean so much.

Elayda didn't succumb to her exhaustion yet, and mysteries are already waiting for her. Especially after being told to find the place in the mountains. What do you think awaits her there? Will she succeed, or will this mission cost her more than she thought?

Comment your thoughts, would love to read them.

*Media is done by me. Please do not steal*

Small reminders:

~Elayda/Celestia: Cohar of the Windreapers and Dearcious's mate in past lifetimes. Has eyes made of seven shades of red and short hair that gleams white and silver.

~Aedis/Leon: The Kyel, the Cohar's mate. Has black hair, with one silver strand, red wine eyes, and runes on one side of his face, covering a gruesome scar.

~Dier/Carter: The Cohar's eldest brother. Has short, midnight-dark hair, and red eyes, their shade one of Elayda's.

~Sédil/Mayra: Huntress. Has middle length, black hair and dark eyes.

~Leyath/Rhiannon: Spy. Has deep red hair and black eyes.

~Veidor/Luthian: Second brother of the Cohar. Has short, burnt brown hair and red eyes, another shade of Elayda's, brighter than Dier.
 
 

Continue Reading

You'll Also Like

151 37 47
Two years after a deadly war with the Snake Kingdom, the grand Kingdom of Celestia has been restored. Our beloved hero, Albedo Aria, has officially b...
330 102 41
UPDATES EVERY TUESDAY AND THURSDAY! In the mystical realm of Veridara, Rhea, a witch with untapped potential, unwittingly steps into a prophecy that...
368 32 10
Second book in the series Evelyn thought her battle was over when she broke from her ancestral bondage and the curse putting the mate bond. Destined...
4.4K 723 120
"As his tongue slid in between mine I felt as if I could have melted into his arms. Just from his touch my mind was sent into a dizzy and confused st...